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Wine

Wine is an alcoholic beverage. The word wine in and of itself is defined as the produce by the fermentation of the juice of grapes - grapes are naturally, chemically balanced to normally ferment completely without requiring extra sugars, acids, enzymes or other nutrients. Other fruits such as apples, berries and blackcurrants are sometimes also fermented. These, however, are referred to as "apple wine" or "elderberry wine".

Non-grape wines are called fruit wine or country wine. Other products made from starch-based materials, such as barley wine, rice wine (sake), are more similar to beers. The English word wine and its equivalents in other languages are protected by law in many jurisdictions.

The word wine comes from the Old English win, which derives from the Proto-Germanic *winam, an early borrowing from the Latin vinum, "wine" or "(grape) vine" — itself derived from the Proto-Indo-European word *win-o

Branches of Semitic languages have similar terms for grape/wine (S. Semitic & Arabic weyn, Hebrew yayin, Akkad. inu, proto-Semitic *wayn-) ; however, the exact relationship with the Indo-European words for vine is disputed. It is generally agreed to have been an early wanderwort. Both Hebrew and Arabic have a separate word for grape - enba/inab which is cognate with fruit in other semitic languages, e.g. Akkadian inbu, Syriac enba; and the choice of translation for the Hebrew yayin as grape may have been as a result of scholars influenced by the agenda of the temperance movement

Early History

The earliest evidence suggesting wine production comes from archaeological sites in Georgia and Iran, dating from 6000 to 5000 BC. The archaeological evidence becomes clearer, and points to domestication of grapevine, in Early Bronze Age sites of the Near East, Sumer and Egypt from around the third millennium BC.

In Egypt, wine became a part of recorded history, playing an important role in ancient ceremonial life.

Wine was common in classical Greece,and Rome. Dionysos was the Greek god of wine and revelry, and wine was frequently referred to in the works of Homer and Aesop. Virtually all of the major wine producing regions of Western Europe today were established by the Romans. Wine making technology improved considerably during the time of the Roman Empire. Many grape varieties and cultivation techniques were known. Barrels were developed for storing and shipping wine. Bottles were used for the first time and the early developments of an appellation system formed as certain regions gained reputations for fine wine.

In medieval Europe, wine was consumed by the church and the noble and merchant classes, ale being the drink of the general populace. Wine was necessary for the celebration of the Catholic Mass, and so assuring a supply was crucial.

Wine Producing Regions

Wine grapes grow almost exclusively between thirty and fifty degrees north or south of the equator. The world's most southerly vineyards are in the South Island of New Zealand near the 45th parallel and the most northerly is in Flen, Sweden, just above the 59th parallel. As a rule, grapevines prefer a relatively long growing season of 100 days or more with warm daytime temperatures (not above 95°F/35°C) and cool nights (a difference of 40°F/23°C or more).

Wine Exporting Countries

The 14 largest export nations (2005 dates) – France, Italy, Spain, Australia, Chile, the United States of America, Germany, South Africa, Portugal, Romania, Moldova, Hungary, Croatia and Argentina. California produces about 90% of the wine in the United States. In 2000, Great Britain imported more wine from Australia than from France for the first time in history.

The leaders in export volume by market share in 2003 were:

  • France, 22%
  • Italy, 20%
  • Spain, 16%
  • Australia, 8%
  • Chile, 6%
  • United States, 5%
  • Portugal, 4%
  • Germany, 4%
 

Champagne

Champagne is a sparkling wine produced by inducing the in-bottle secondary fermentation of wine to effect carbonation. It is named after the Champagne region of France.

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Some images compliments of morguefile.com and phototakeout.com Text from wikipedia.org